New Scientist recommends Hamnet, and its look at our links with nature


4238_D045_00238_R Jessie Buckley stars as Agnes and Joe Alwyn as Bartholomew in director Chlo?? Zhao???s HAMNET, a Focus Features release. Credit: Agata Grzybowska / ?? 2025 FOCUS FEATURES LLC

Jessie Buckley as Agnes in Hamnet

AGATA GRZYBOWSKA/2025 FOCUS FEATURES LLC

The film Hamnet, based on Maggie O’Farrell’s novel, rightly emphasises the relationship between people and nature. We meet Agnes (Jessie Buckley, pictured above), Hamnet’s mother and wife of William Shakespeare, in the woods, asleep. She is said to be the daughter of a wood witch, and we see her making poultices and herbal remedies.

But understanding the interconnection between people and nature is something Shakespeare was very aware of. In Hamlet, the king asks after Polonius – knowing he is dead. The prince says he is at supper: “Not where he eats, but where he is eaten … We fat all creatures else to fat us, and we fat ourselves for maggots… A man may fish with the worm that hath eat of a king, and eat of the fish that hath fed of that worm.”

Shakespeare places humans in the food chain. In the intelligent, moving Hamnet, O’Farrell and director Chloe Zhao recycle the essence of the dead boy into the fictional Hamlet.

Rowan Hooper
Podcast editor, London

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Publish date : 2026-02-11 18:00:00

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